bibtype J - Journal Article
ARLID 0618521
utime 20250423143248.9
mtime 20250331235959.9
DOI 10.5194/ar-3-155-2025
title (primary) (eng) Unchanged PM2.5 levels over Europe during COVID-19 were buffered by ammonia
specification
page_count 20 s.
media_type E
serial
ARLID cav_un_epca*0619169
ISSN 2940-3405
title Aerosol Research
volume_id 3
volume 1 (2025)
page_num 155-174
keyword COVID-19
keyword PM 2.5
keyword Ammonia (NH3)
author (primary)
ARLID cav_un_auth*0363740
name1 Evangeliou
name2 N.
country NO
author
ARLID cav_un_auth*0267768
name1 Tichý
name2 Ondřej
institution UTIA-B
full_dept (cz) Adaptivní systémy
full_dept Department of Adaptive Systems
department (cz) AS
department AS
full_dept Department of Adaptive Systems
fullinstit Ústav teorie informace a automatizace AV ČR, v. v. i.
author
ARLID cav_un_auth*0471938
name1 Otervik
name2 M. S.
country NO
author
ARLID cav_un_auth*0419235
name1 Eckhardt
name2 S.
country NO
author
ARLID cav_un_auth*0450270
name1 Balkanski
name2 Y.
country FR
author
ARLID cav_un_auth*0450271
name1 Hauglustaine
name2 D.
country FR
source
url https://library.utia.cas.cz/separaty/2025/AS/tichy-0618521.pdf
source
url https://ar.copernicus.org/articles/3/155/2025/
cas_special
project
project_id GA24-10400S
agency GA ČR
country CZ
ARLID cav_un_auth*0464279
abstract (eng) The coronavirus outbreak in 2020 had a devastating impact on human life, albeit a positive effect on the environment, reducing emissions of primary aerosols and trace gases and improving air quality. In this paper, we present inverse modelling estimates of ammonia emissions during the European lockdowns of 2020 based on satellite observations. Ammonia has a strong seasonal cycle and mainly originates from agriculture. We further show how changes in ammonia levels over Europe, in conjunction with decreases in traffic-related atmospheric constituents, modulated PM2.5. The key result of this study is a −9.8 % decrease in ammonia emissions in the period of 15 March–30 April 2020 (lockdown period) compared to the same period in 2016–2019, attributed to restrictions related to the global pandemic. We further calculate the delay in the evolution of the ammonia emissions in 2020 before, during, and after lockdowns, using a sophisticated comparison of the evolution of ammonia emissions during the same time periods for the reference years (2016–2019). Our analysis demonstrates a clear delay in the evolution of ammonia emissions of −77 kt, which was mainly observed in the countries that imposed the strictest travel, social, and working measures. Despite the general drop in emissions during the first half of 2020 and the delay in the evolution of the emissions during the lockdown period, satellite and ground-based observations showed that the European levels of ammonia increased. On one hand, this was due to the reductions in SO2 and NOx (precursors of the atmospheric acids with which ammonia reacts) that caused less binding and thus less chemical removal of ammonia (smaller loss – higher lifetime). On the other hand, the majority of the emissions persisted because ammonia mainly originates from agriculture, a primary production sector that was influenced very little by the lockdown restrictions. Despite the projected drop in various atmospheric aerosols and trace gases, PM2.5 levels stayed unchanged or even increased in Europe due to a number of reasons that were attributed to the complicated NH3--H2SO4--HNO3 system. Higher water vapour during the European lockdowns favoured more sulfate production from SO2 and OH (gas phase) or O3 (aqueous phase). Ammonia first reacted with sulfuric acid, also producing sulfate. Then, the continuously accumulating free ammonia reacted with nitric acid, shifting the equilibrium reaction towards particulate nitrate. In high-free-ammonia atmospheric conditions such as those in Europe during the 2020 lockdowns, a small reduction in NOx levels drives faster oxidation toward nitrate and slower deposition of total inorganic nitrate, causing high secondary PM2.5 levels.
RIV BB
FORD0 10000
FORD1 10500
FORD2 10509
reportyear 2026
num_of_auth 6
inst_support RVO:67985556
permalink https://hdl.handle.net/11104/0365894
cooperation
ARLID cav_un_auth*0420880
name NILU Norsk Inst Luftforskning, Kjeller, Norway
confidential S
mrcbC91 A
arlyear 2025
mrcbU14 SCOPUS
mrcbU24 PUBMED
mrcbU34 WOS
mrcbU63 cav_un_epca*0619169 Aerosol Research 3 1 2025 155 174 2940-3405 2940-3391